Callonia wrote...
1. I mentioned no game no life because I want second season badly.
2. Its what I have observed and seen the comments over the internet. Unpopular anime don't get more than one season. Publishers only care if it will make them rich or not and then act accordingly. Popular anime = lots of buyers = lots moolah for publishers to buy their 100th yacht.
3. Again, Money. But there is one way you can do to combat the problem. Become rich and start a studio and have it focus onto your standards of perfectionism, they will after all you're paying their paychecks.
4. You're welcome. I'm just chilling around.
Nah I don't know how much they spend, I don't bother to look up XD Mainly because I'm guessing alot of answers can be found in japanese text.
1. Ah okay, my misunderstanding lol. Also, I didn't think it was a 'bad' anime, it just wasn't super memorable (to me) personally. Still better than a lot of that season though, which shows that it was a weak season (not surprisingly, summer tends to be a weak anime season most years it seems)
2. True that, without making money their company would not be able to compete with others, which would lead to loss in profits and even potentially eventual bankruptcy.
3. Wow, I didn't think of it that way. Although that would be nice, the problem with that is that if I actually pulled it off my priorities toward production might change, I'd care less about the quality and more about the quantity of money I get, which could mess up my dreams as envisioned. Would be entirely my fault, but it's probably for the better anyway. I'll watch anything, really, I have no such snobbish standards for watching things, I just like to complain about things after the fact, which could be good or bad depending if I'm right or just biased (mostly the latter though lol).
4. No probs, I might be a bother with all this text most of the time, but I hope we get along ^_^
On a mostly unrelated note, but still partially related to your comment about Japanese text, surprisingly reading/writing Japanese had been much easier than speaking it, even with the aid of taking college Classes.
Actually, writing it seems easier than reading them, since I only need remember stroke order and the strokes themselves, whereas I have to decipher the Kanji's reading in context (either kunyomi or onyomi), which is giving me significant trouble.
Granted, we aren't actually supposed to start learning several different readings in both forms until Japanese 103, but why not get an early start? It's hard as hell now, I certainly don't want to struggle this hard when it's required.
I start 102 this coming tuesday, took 101 last term, but to confuse myself harder I'm also taking Chinese 101 this term, wish me luck lol I'll need it ^_^